How the 2020 census may help Republicans regain power in Washington
Reapportionment, gerrymandering and the Supreme Court could help the Republicans take back the House
EVERY TEN years the Census Bureau attempts to track every person in America. The count, required by the constitution, is inherently democratising, for each individual sees themselves reflected in a countrywide sum of inhabitants. Among other things, the resulting numbers in each state are used to divvy up federal tax dollars and draw boundaries for congressional districts, a process known as apportionment. But this year, because of complications from covid-19, the numbers will be late. The bureau has announced that the apportionment estimates will not be released until September, whereas they would usually be sent out in March.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “House that?”
United States March 13th 2021
- America’s battle over election laws
- How the 2020 census may help Republicans regain power in Washington
- Press freedom under pressure
- Why taking pilots out of planes has been more expensive than anticipated
- Tribes of the Hamptons
- A Californian experiment in the provision of guaranteed income returns its first results
- Joe Manchin, the wild man of the mountains
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